For an average of 7.5 years, girls are told their pain is normal, dramatic, or in their heads. TrustHer turns their stories into documented evidence – and shifts the burden of proof back onto the systems that failed them.
The pain the world keeps calling normal
Independent · Research-based · Qualitative · Girls never pay
A data-driven movement that changes how institutions respond to girls' health concerns – building an evidence base that can't be ignored.
We collect and amplify real stories from girls navigating health systems – lived experience as evidence.
Live visualisations show patterns, gaps and progress across schools, healthcare and workplaces.
Evidence-based tools that help teachers, clinicians and employers recognise and respond – the right way.
Training, ambassadors and research partnerships that create systemic change in how we support girls.
These three words should be the first response every girl hears when she speaks about pain. Too often they're dismissed, minimised, or ignored. TrustHer exists to end that pattern – building a world where every institution has the knowledge, tools and accountability to believe girls, act on their concerns, and support them from the start. Because a girl has no way of knowing her pain isn't normal – naming what isn't, and acting on it, is the system's job, never hers.
Girls wait years between first symptoms and a diagnosis for conditions like endometriosis, PMOS (PCOS) and chronic pelvic pain.
This isn't only individual suffering – it's a systemic failure, with ripple effects on education, careers, mental health and lifelong wellbeing.
Why she stays silent
A girl living this has never known anything else. No earlier body to compare to, no word for what she's feeling, no reference for what a normal period even is. So she assumes it's her – that she's weak, dramatic, or simply built this way.
Expecting her to raise the alarm asks her to name something she was never given the language for. That is the system's job: to define what is not normal, notice it early, and act – so no girl has to first prove she is unwell in order to be believed.
"I used to think I was weak for missing school. Now I understand my body was trying to tell me something important – and I deserved to be heard."
These are not isolated cases. This is structural failure across school, health, law and care.
Every one of the ten changes below is already grounded in research. We keep them lit low for one reason: the proof a country can't dismiss comes from its own women. The moment the first 15 women in your country speak, they turn from muted to proven – and every country starts at zero, waiting for its first voices.
So don't just read it – send it on. Every voice you carry further pulls a country onto the map and puts its truth in front of the world. That's how TrustHer becomes the place girls everywhere are finally believed.
Early, intense symptoms around age 10–11 are normalised, dismissed or ignored – delaying help for years.
Ta deg sammen, alle har menssmerter innimellom.English translationPull yourself together — everyone gets period pain now and then.TrustHer-pilot · beskjeden hun fikk
Pain is read as truancy or attention-seeking. Meetings happen about girls, not with them. Absence over cause.
Ble tatt vekk fra resten av klassen til rektors kontor for å bli fortalt at vi faktisk har skoleplikt i Norge.English translationI was taken out of class to the principal's office to be told that school is, in fact, compulsory in Norway.TrustHer-pilot
Girls and parents become the messengers between two systems that won't communicate.
Her words for this one are still missing.
Did this happen to you? Tell your story →Dismissed pain creates trauma – not the pain itself, the disbelief.
Følelsen av å ikke bli trodd har ødelagt min tro på helsevesenet totalt.English translationThe feeling of not being believed has completely destroyed my trust in the health service.TrustHer-pilot
Girls are socially erased: fewer friends, less belonging, deepening shame.
Her words for this one are still missing.
Did this happen to you? Tell your story →Symptoms → absence → misinterpretation → no support → educational failure.
Slutt på hysterisk fokus på fravær. Det tar liv og ødelegger fremtiden til så mange.English translationStop the hysterical focus on absence. It takes lives and destroys the future of so many.TrustHer-pilot
Mothers carry the system alone, without support or cooperation.
Mamma… sa at hun vurderte å få barnevernet til å ta meg…English translationMum… said she was considering getting child protective services to take me away…TrustHer-pilot
Classic medical gaslighting → delayed diagnosis → worse outcomes.
En gynekolog sa at det ikke var noe galt – og jeg hadde nettopp vært gjennom en kikkhullsoperasjon to måneder før.English translationA gynaecologist told me nothing was wrong — and I had just been through keyhole surgery two months before.TrustHer-pilot
One adult can reverse years of harm. Belief is intervention.
Forskjellen på å ville leve og ikke ville leve.English translationThe difference between wanting to live and not wanting to live.TrustHer-pilot · om å bli trodd
Girls endure preventable harm caused by predictable, repeated system errors.
Det tok 16 år med å kjempe for symptomene mine før jeg endelig fikk en utforskende kikkhullsoperasjon. Og fire år til før jeg fikk en ordentlig diagnose.English translationIt took 16 years of fighting for my symptoms before I finally got an exploratory keyhole surgery. And four more years before I got a proper diagnosis.TrustHer-pilot
Girls are not failing in school – the system is failing in its duty to protect, adapt and believe them.
The situations many girls live in for years – not being believed, not being examined – can themselves be legal breaches she pays dearly for. Here's what the law says where you are; check with legal help before institutional use.
Endre jurisdiksjon øverst på siden – lovverket her følger valget ditt.
Whether you are a girl trying to understand your own body, a parent going into a school meeting, or a school building a policy – there is a tool built for that exact situation.
This isn't opinion. TrustHer is built on the published record – diagnostic-delay studies, prevalence meta-analyses, and the economics of the women's-health gap. We translate that research into empathy, tools and accountability. Nothing here is demo: every number below traces back to a source.
TrustHer holds systems accountable for girls' health across schools, healthcare and workplaces – turning lived experience into evidence, so being believed never rests on the girl alone.